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1987 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles season

The 1987 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles season was the 41st in the club's history since their entry into the then New South Wales Rugby Football League premiership in 1947.


1987 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles season
NSWRL champions
1st
Wins: 20; draws: 1; losses: 5
For: 581; against: 370
Doug Daley
Bob Fulton
Alan Thompson (Reserve Grade)
.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul{line-height:inherit;list-style:none;margin:0;padding:0}.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol li,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul li{margin-bottom:0} Paul Vautin Noel Cleal (vice-captain)
Brookvale Oval
Dale Shearer (13)
Mal Cochrane (59)
Mal Cochrane (138)
← 19861988 →
← 19861988 →

The 1987 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles season was the 41st in the club's history since their entry into the then New South Wales Rugby Football League premiership in 1947.

The 1987 Sea Eagles were coached by triple Manly premiership player and former Kangaroo Tour captain Bob Fulton. Captaining the side was Queensland back rower Paul Vautin. The club competed in the New South Wales Rugby League's 1987 Premiership season and played its home games at the 27,000 capacity Brookvale Oval.

Tries: Goals: Bronko Djura (2/3)[ Report]Tries: Goals: Mal Cochrane (2/2)Attendance: 10,650Referee: Giles O'Donnell
Tries: Dale Shearer (3), Mal Cochrane, Des Hasler, Martin Meredith, David Ronson Goals: Mal Cochrane (6/9) Michael O'Connor (1/1)[ Report]Tries: Craig Connor, Ben Gonzales, Matt Goodwin Goals: Mark Bevan (3/3)Attendance: 6,374Referee: Graham Annesley
Tries: John Allanson Goals: Ian Schubert (3/6)[ Report]Tries: Des Hasler, Michael O'Connor, David Ronson, Dale Shearer Goals: Mal Cochrane (3/5)Attendance: 8,822Referee: Mick Stone
Tries: Ian Barkley, Mal Cochrane, Des Hasler, Steve Park Goals: Michael O'Connor (2/3) Mal Cochrane (1/3)[ Report]Tries: Goals: John Muggleton (2/2)Attendance: 17,757Referee: Mick Stone

Bye

Tries: Michael Hagan, Steve Mortimer Goals: Terry Lamb (5/6)[ Report]Tries: Jeremy Ticehurst Goals: Mal Cochrane (1/3)Attendance: 13,553Referee: Mick Stone
Tries: Ian Barkley, Cliff Lyons, Michael O'Connor Goals: Michael O'Connor (3/4)[ Report]Tries: David Boyle, Wayne Chisholm, Mario Fenech, Steve Mavin, Ian Roberts Goals: Michael Andrews (4/7)Attendance: 14,601Referee: Graham Annesley
Tries: Greg Nixon, Ron Quinn, Sean Watson Goals: Sean Watson (3/7)[ Report]Tries: Des Hasler, Dale Shearer Goals: Michael O'Connor (2/3) Field Goals: Cliff Lyons (1)Attendance: 10,931Referee: Bill Harrigan
Tries: Chris Close, Mark Pocock, Paul Vautin Goals: Mal Cochrane (3/4)[ Report]Tries: Wayne Portlock Goals: Tony Melrose (3/4)Attendance: 10,247Referee: Mick Stone
Tries: Sam Backo, Ashley Gilbert Goals: Phil Carey (1/2)[ Report]Tries: Greg Austin, Noel Cleal, Cliff Lyons Goals: Mal Cochrane (3/4)Attendance: 4,885Referee: Greg McCallum
Tries: Stuart Davis (2), Dale Shearer, Jeremy Ticehurst Goals: Mal Cochrane (3/6)[ Report]Tries: Graeme Bradley, Perry Haddock Goals: Dean Carney (2/4)Attendance: 7,053Referee: Kevin Roberts
Tries: Mark Cannon, Greg Florimo, Ian French Goals: John Dorahy (5/5)[ Report]Tries: Noel Cleal (2), Ian Barkley, Dale Shearer Goals: Mal Cochrane (7/7)Attendance: 11,391Referee: Greg McCallum
Tries: Darrell Williams (3), Ron Gibbs (2), Mal Cochrane, Stuart Davis, Michael O'Connor, David Ronson Goals: Mal Cochrane (6/9)[ Report]Tries: Benny Elias, Russel Gartner Goals: Lee Crooks (3/3)Attendance: 25,448Referee: Kevin Roberts
Tries: Des Hasler, Dale Shearer, Darrell Williams Goals: Mal Cochrane (3/6) Michael O'Connor (1/1)[ Report]Tries: Graeme Wynn Goals: Ricky Walford (1/2)Attendance: 12,041Referee: Mick Stone
Tries: Mark Robinson Goals: Andrew Fitzhenry (3/4)[ Report]Tries: Stuart Davis Goals: Mal Cochrane (4/4)Attendance: Barry BarnesReferee: 8,287
Tries: Stuart Davis (2), Cliff Lyons, Michael O'Connor, David Ronson Goals: Mal Cochrane (3/7)[ Report]Tries: John Allanson, Trevor Cogger, Ian Naden, Paul Sheahan Goals: Ian Schubert (3/6) Hew Rees (1/1) Field Goals: Ian Naden (1)Attendance: 10,732Referee: Bill Harrigan
Tries: Tony Chalmers, Michael Erickson, Brett Kenny, Bob Lindner, John Muggleton Goals: John Muggleton (1/5)[ Report]Tries: Dale Shearer (2), Des Hasler, Cliff Lyons, Michael O'Connor, David Ronson Goals: Michael O'Connor (3/6)Attendance: 25,139Referee: Kevin Roberts

Bye

Tries: Greg Austin, Noel Cleal, Ron Gibbs, Des Hasler, Martin Meredith Goals: Mal Cochrane (6/8)[ Report]Tries: Goals: Terry Lamb (1/2)Attendance: 16,252Referee: Greg McCallum
Tries: Craig Coleman, Steve Mavin Goals: Mark Ellison (2/3) Field Goals: Mark Ellison (1)[ Report]Tries: Ron Gibbs, Cliff Lyons Goals: Mal Cochrane (4/6)Attendance: 23,257Referee: Mick Stone
Tries: Michael O'Connor (2), Dale Shearer (2), Mal Cochrane, Stuart Davis Goals: Michael O'Connor (3/6)[ Report]Tries: Jonathan Docking Goals: Sean Watson (1/3) Alan Wilson (1/1)Attendance: 14,323Referee: Graham Annesley
Tries: Steve Morris (2), Brendan Hall, David Smith Goals: David Smith (5/5)[ Report]Tries: Noel Cleal, Michael O'Connor, Darrell Williams Goals: Michael O'Connor (2/3)Attendance: 6,573Referee: Graham Annesley
Tries: Mal Cochrane, Martin Meredith, Kevin Ward Goals: Mal Cochrane (4/5)[ Report]Tries: Sam Backo, Ashley Gilbert, Kevin Walters Goals: Matthew Corkery (3/5)Attendance: 9,114Referee: Bill Harrigan
Tries: Steve Larder (2), Graeme Bradley Goals: Dean Carney (2/5) Field Goals: Chris Withall (1)[ Report]Tries: Noel Cleal (2), Paul Shaw, Michael O'Connor Goals: Michael O'Connor (4/4)Attendance: 10,740Referee: Giles O'Donnell
Tries: Stuart Davis, Michael O'Connor, David Ronson, Dale Shearer, Martin Meredith Goals: Michael O'Connor (5/7)[ Report]Tries: Mark Cannon (2), John McArthur (2), Ian French, Kevin Marr Goals: John McArthur (4/7)Attendance: 13,913Referee: Bill Harrigan
Tries: John Davidson, Garry Schofield Goals:[ Report]Tries: Des Hasler (2), Cliff Lyons, David Ronson Goals: Michael O'Connor (5/5)Attendance: 13,557Referee: Graham Annesley
Tries: David Ronson Goals: Michael O'Connor (3/3)[ Report]Tries: David French Goals: David Smith (1/2)Attendance: 36,399Referee: Greg McCallum
Column 1Column 2
Manly-WarringahCanberra
FB1Dale Shearer
RW2David Ronson
CE3Darrell Williams
CE4Michael O'Connor
LW5Stuart Davis
FE6Cliff Lyons
HB7Des Hasler
LK8Paul Vautin (c)
SR9Noel Cleal
SR10Ron Gibbs
PR11Kevin Ward
HK12Mal Cochrane
PR13Phil Daley
Substitutions:
IC20Paul Shaw
IC24Mark Pocock
Coach:
Bob Fulton
FB1Gary Belcher
RW2Chris Kinna
CE3Mal Meninga
CE4Peter Jackson
LW5Matthew Corkery
FE6Chris O'Sullivan
HB7Ivan Henjak
LK8Dean Lance (c)
SR9Gary Coyne
SR10Ashley Gilbert
PR11Sam Backo
HK12Steve Walters
PR13Brent Todd
Substitutions:
IC14Kevin Walters
IC15Terry Regan
Coach:
Don Furner and Wayne Bennett

From the outset Manly's Cliff Lyons attempted to find gaps out wide in Canberra's defence and kept the Raiders hemmed in on their own side of half-way with his astute kicking. Lyons stepped inside the Raiders' defence and after a seventy-metre burst found Noel Cleal stampeding on to the ball but Cleal's final pass to Des Hasler was ruled forward. Another promising Manly raid broke down after Lyons had initially dummied to O'Connor, then proceeded to run around Peter Jackson and head 30 metres downfield. It all came to naught however when Lyons' reverse pass to O'Connor was put to ground after O'Connor had thought Lyons would dummy to him again, with Lyons actually having what TV replays showed to be an unimpeded run to the try line had he looked ahead and not tried to pass.

Manly continued to put pressure on the Raiders defence with both speedsters Michael O'Connor and Dale Shearer trying to catch the Raiders out with long range kicks to their in-goal area in front of the SCG hill, but both were only just beaten to the ball each time by Gary Belcher and Gary Coyne respectively.

In the 27th minute Lyons eventually broke through on his third threatening attempt. Scurrying from a scrum win on the Canberra quarter-line, Lyons brushed off the tackle of Chris O'Sullivan and stepped inside Belcher to score.

The Sea Eagles led 6–0 at half-time though it could have been much greater had they taken advantage of the opportunities Cliff Lyons had been creating. Other than the Lyons try, the closest Manly actually got to scoring again in the first half ended with a ball-and-all tackle by Belcher on Dale Shearer just two metres from the Canberra try line. For their part, Canberra rarely threatened the Manly line with a midfield break by Mal Meninga stopped by a good Des Hasler tackle, while Shearer repaid his opposite when he took down Belcher who had taken an inside pass from a Peter Jackson break.

From the second half restart kick-off, Belcher fielded the ball in his in-goal but was penalised for shepherding behind Chris O'Sullivan as he ran the ball out. It was a gift penalty for O'Connor to take Manly out to an 8–0 lead.

The Sea Eagles kept the pressure on Canberra by charging down two attempted clearing kicks by a tiring Mal Meninga. Only occasionally did the Raiders break through. After a run by Peter Jackson, Manly's Phil Daley was penalised for a high tackle and Meninga's goal finally put Canberra on the scoreboard.

Fatigue and the heat began to take a toll on the players, though one of the more surprising efforts was Manly's English prop Kevin Ward who ran and tackled strongly all day. Meninga, who had only played 60 minutes of football since breaking his arm in a game against Manly almost two months earlier, was replaced by Kevin Walters after 15 minutes of the second half and Manly's Gibbs, Cleal and Cochrane all went down hurt at different stages as the pace of the match slowed (for his part, Cochrane still can not remember the second half). Soon after a successful penalty goal from O'Connor, a Dale Shearer cross field kick from the Raiders 22m line was grounded over the line by O'Connor in the Paddington corner. While Manly winger David Ronson was thought to be offside (though he did not get involved in the play, he was still within 10 metres of O'Connor), many claim that the Manly centre should have been ruled offside as he got the ball "rather quickly" (Ch.10's television replays would prove inconclusive, however a wider shot shown on the ABC showed that O'Connor was actually onside). However, what counted was that referee Mick Stone ruled that Manly's international centre was onside and O'Connor was awarded the try. He converted his own try (giving him 4/4 goals at that point) and Manly had a premiership winning 16–2 lead.

A brief hope of a fightback loomed after an ingeniously constructed "trojan horse" move by Canberra. Chris O'Sullivan went down "injured" after being tackled and then miraculously popped up in the next passage of play to take the inside pass from Ivan Henjak and score. With Meninga off the ground, Gary Belcher converted to narrow the scores to 16–8.

Ron Gibbs' return from the head-bin helped snap the Sea Eagles out of their complacency. Daley's tackle on Canberra replacement Terry Regan and Dale Shearer's try-saving tackle on Ashley Gilbert three minutes from full-time ended any chance of a Canberra fightback. Paul Vautin led the charge back up-field with Hasler being bundled into the corner post after a run-around movement with O'Connor. The Manly centre also had a try taken off him just minutes after his previous try when Mick Stone ruled a pass from Cliff Lyons had gone forward.

Right on full-time, O'Connor landed his fifth goal from five attempts after the Raiders were penalised in front of their own posts for being offside after a tap-kick restart. The 18–8 scoreline was a fair indication of Manly's supremacy on the day and a just result considering the Sea Eagles' consistency throughout the year.

Manly became the first team other than Canterbury-Bankstown or Parramatta to win the grand final during the 1980s (Manly had been beaten grand finalists in 1982 and 1983, losing both times to Parramatta).

Manly centre Darrell Williams became the first ever New Zealander to win the Sydney Premiership, while Paul Vautin became the first, and so far only Queenslander to captain the Sea Eagles to a winning Grand Final.

For Manly coach Bob Fulton, premiership glory in a nine-year coaching career was finally achieved. For the dual Canberra coaches it marked a milestone. It was a sad ending to the long club coaching career of Don Furner, the man who brought Canberra into the competition in 1982. Furner, a 1956–57 Kangaroo tourist, had been coaching in the Sydney Premiership since taking over as Easts coach in 1970 (losing the 1972 Grand Final to Manly), and along the way had also coached the undefeated 1986 Kangaroo Tour squad known as "The Unbeatables". For his partner, Queensland's Wayne Bennett, the tactician behind the side, it was a disappointing exit but another door was about to open on his own stellar coaching career with the Brisbane Broncos and a continuing career as Queensland Origin coach.

1987 saw the second World Club Challenge game between the reigning New South Wales Rugby League premiers and the reigning Rugby Football League (England) champions. This game was held in England less than two weeks following the 1987 NSWRL grand final.

The match was played at 7:45pm on a dry Wednesday night, 7 October at the Central Park ground in Wigan. A crowd of 36,895 was in attendance for the game, though unofficial estimates from those present put the attendance as high as 50,000. The game was refereed by RFL international referee John Holdsworth. Former four-time Manly premiership winning Fullback Graham Eadie, who at the time was playing in England with 1987 Challenge Cup winners Halifax, was on hand as a match commentator as was dual Manly premiership player (and captain of the 1978 team) and the skipper of the 1982 Invincibles, Max Krilich.

Column 1Column 2
WiganManly-Warringah
FB1Steve Hampson
RW2Richard Russell
CE3Darrell Williams
CE4Joe Lydon
LW5Henderson Gill
SO6Shaun Edwards
SH7Andy Gregory
PR8Brian Case
HK9Nicky Kiss
PR10Shaun Wane
SR11Andy Goodway
SR12Ian Potter
LF13Ellery Hanley (c)
Substitutions:
IC14Ged Byrne
IC15Graeme West
IC16Ian Gildart
IC17Ian Lucas
Coach:
Graham Lowe
FB1Dale Shearer
RW2David Ronson
CE3Darrell Williams
CE4Michael O'Connor
LW5Stuart Davis
FE6Cliff Lyons
HB7Des Hasler
LK8Paul Vautin (c)
SR9Owen Cunningham
SR10Ron Gibbs
PR11Ian Gately
HK12Mal Cochrane
PR13Phil Daley
Substitutions:
IC14Mark Brokenshire
IC15Jeremy Ticehurst
IC16Mark Pocock
IC17Paul Shaw
Coach:
Bob Fulton

No tries were scored in what was a closely fought and, at times, spiteful encounter. Michael O'Connor opened the scoring for Manly with a successful penalty kick in only the second minute, which would turn out to be the only time the Sea Eagles scored. Tempers flared as the match went on, punctuated by more penalties and a few unsavoury incidents:

  • Manly forward Ron Gibbs became the first person to be sent off in a World Club Challenge match for illegal use of the elbow when taking out Joe Lydon high after he attempted a drop-goal;
  • An all-in brawl erupted after Dale Shearer was lifted in a tackle then started a punch-up in the ruck with Brian Case;
  • After taking Manly captain Paul Vautin over the touchline, a group of Wigan defenders went on to take him over the fence causing another all-in brawl;
  • Later, when Shearer brought down Lydon in defence, he appeared to step on the Great Britain international's head as he got up after making the tackle.

Amongst all of these incidents Wigan's David Stephenson kicked four penalty goals, which in the end would prove decisive. The score was 8 - 2 in favour of the home side as the final whistle blew, prompting the overjoyed Wigan supporters to flood onto the field to celebrate with the players.

In his biography The Strife and Times of Paul Vautin written by Mike Coleman and released in 1992, the Manly captain told that the Sea Eagles players were so convinced that they would beat Wigan after their grand final win over the Canberra Raiders and after the undefeated 1986 Kangaroo Tour, that they treated the trip to England more as a holiday than anything serious and continued celebrating their GF win while there. Vautin and the other Manly players believe that their poor attitude is what ultimately cost them the game. Wigan on the other hand, led by their Kiwi coach Graham Lowe and featuring 11 Great Britain and one New Zealand international (compared to 5 Australian and one New Zealand international for Manly), took the game very seriously with pride their main motivation after the Great Britain Lions had been humiliated by the Australian's with 4 straight 3-0 Ashes series losses since the disastrous 1979 Australasian tour and the popular belief that the NSWRL Premiership was superior to the RFL's.

In a twist, after leading Wigan to numerous cup titles over the next two seasons, Graham Lowe would become Manly's head coach from 1990 to 1992.

Note: Games and (sub) show total games played, e.g. 1 (1) is 2 games played. List does not include World Club Challenge.

PlayerGames (sub)TriesGoalsFGPoints
Greg Austin1 (3)28
Ian Barkley11 (1)416
Mark Brokenshire12
Noel Cleal (vc)14 (1)728
Chris Close8 (2)14
Mal Cochrane25559/92138
Mitchell Cox(2)
Peter Cullum(3)
Owen Cunningham4 (2)
Phil Daley18
Stuart Davis15 (1)832
Ian Gately4 (3)
Ron Gibbs26416
Marty Gurr3 (1)
Charlie Haggett(1)
Des Hasler24936
Matthew Loft(1)
Cliff Lyons21 (1)7129
Martin Meredith7 (4)312
Michael O'Connor211139/51122
Steve Park714
Mark Pocock6 (12)14
David Ronson22 (2)832
Glenn Ryan(3)
Paul Shaw2 (9)28
Dale Shearer201352
Jeremy Ticehurst9 (4)312
Paul Vautin (c)2314
Kevin Ward1114
Darrell Williams22520
TOTAL9698/1431581
  • Australia – Michael O'Connor, Dale Shearer

  • New Zealand – Darrell Williams

  • New South Wales – Noel Cleal, Phil Daley, Des Hasler, Cliff Lyons, Michael O'Connor

  • Queensland – Dale Shearer, Paul Vautin

  • City Origin – Des Hasler, Michael O'Connor

  • City Firsts – Phil Daley

  • City Seconds – Mark Brokenshire

  • Country Origin – Noel Cleal, Mal Cochrane, Ron Gibbs

  • Manly Warringah Sea Eagles official website

  • National Rugby League official website

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